Born in Buffalo, New York and trained in sculpture and ceramics at Tyler School of Art, Julia Policastro has developed a practice that lives between object and image, structure and softness. Early work experiences at the Fabric Workshop and Museum and alongside artist Karen Kilimnik shaped her approach to material, surface, and storytelling, prompting an evolution from sculpture to painting — and eventually, a merging of the two.
Today, Policastro layers plaster and oil in works that echo textile design, tapestries, historical painting, and interior spaces, creating pieces that feel both built and imagined. Her work blurs the traditional separation between craft and fine art, not to diminish either, but to expand their shared possibilities — opening a space where texture becomes language, and where composition unfolds more like memory than convention. Exhibited in Philadelphia, New York, and North Carolina, her work invites viewers to linger, look closely, and reconsider what painting can hold.
We asked Julia about her practice and everyday life!